EARLY IN JULY, a smothering heat wave settled in over the western U.S.â124 degrees Fahrenheit in Palm Springs; 120 in Las Vegas; 119 in Redding, in far northern California. Dan Berc, a National Weather Service meteorologist, described the situation as ânot normal ⊠Weâre talking ten to 12 degrees above normal for the hottest part of the year.â That first week of July, a thousand fish died in Lake Elizabeth, in Fremont, Californiaâ asphyxiation; the hotter the water, the less oxygen it holds. Still, in western Arizona, in the foothills of the Mohave Mountains, Alyssa Wroblewski assumed July 5 would be, as she later put it, âa regular, happy dayâ for her family. She and her husband, Matthew, a detective in the Riverside Police Department, would take their toddler and infant daughters out on a boat on Lake Havasu, a Colorado River reservoir.
The Wroblewskis did this all the time, strapping life preservers on their young kids. They boated in April, just weeks after Tanna Rae was born. They boated in May and June. That Fourth of July weekend, Alyssa and Matthew dressed their daughters in matching red, white, and blue swimsuits. Tannaâs diaper poked out between the suitâs leg band and her fat-rolled thigh.
Childrenâs bodies cool themselves less efficiently than adultsâ, and babiesâ bodies cool even less efficiently than that. By afternoon, on the lake, the air temperature had climbed to 120. Around 5 p.m., Alyssa and Matthew realized Tanna wasnât breathing. The parents performed CPR until the fire department arrived. Four-month-old Tanna was airlifted to Phoenix Childrenâs Hospital. But it was too late.
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